Title: experimental RESEARCH
1experimental RESEARCH
- BUSN 364 Week 12
- Özge Can
2- Stanford Marshmallow Experiment
- Measuring delayed gratification (ability to wait
in order to obtain something you want) - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vx3S0xS2hdi4
- A child is given a marshmallow and promised
another, only if they could wait before eating
the first one. - Researchers measure how long the child resists
the temptation of eating it - Whether correlated with future success or not
3Experimental Research
- Builds on the principles of positivist
perspective and natural sciences - (1) Starts with a causal hypothesis
- (2) Modify one specific aspect of a situation
that is closely connected to the cause, and - (3) Compare the outcome to what existed without
the modification
4Example Experiment
- Manipulation of Independent Variable
- Question Do suggestions affect memories?
- Method Randomly assign participants to groups
and tell some participants that dreams indicate
prior experience but do not tell that to other
participants. - Results Dream interpretations induce changes in
memories of past events. - Conclusion We can influence peoples memories
by giving them erroneous information
5Attributes of Experiments
- Can powerfully test causal relationships
- An experiment is often artificial gt includes
independent and dependent variables but exclude
confounding variables - Confounding Variables Factors that are not part
of the intended hypothesis but have effects on
variables of interest - Best for issues that have a narrow scope and
sharpened focus
6Attributes of Experiments
- Isolates and targets one or a few causal
variables not effective for considering dozens
of variables simultaneously - Best suited for micro-level (individuals,
small-groups) more than macro-level (entire
society) theoretical concerns - Practical and ethical limitations in social
science experiments gt We cannot manipulate many
areas/conditions of human life
7Power of Experimental Design
- Is it better to study these with a survey or
experiment? - Playing violent video games increases aggressive
behavior - Students who sit at the front of the classroom
make better grades than those that sit in the
back
8Power of Experimental Design
- Consider recent changes that have been made on
your campus (e.g., changes in graduation
requirements or student life issues). Did the
administration use experiments or
quasi-experiments to determine whether or not to
make these changes? Can you think of situations
in which an experimental approach could have been
used?
9Parts of the Experiment
- 1. Treatment or independent variable (IV)
- 2. Dependent variable (DV)
- 3. Pretest
- 4. Posttest
- 5. Experimental group
- 6. Control group
- 7. Random assignment
10Parts of the Experiment
- Treatment gt (stimulus, manipulation) the
independent variable or a combination of
independent variables in experimental research - Dependent variable gt the outcome in experimental
research. It is measured by paper-and-pencil
tests, observation, interviews or physiological
responses (e.g. heart beat, palm sweating) - Pretest gt the measurement of the independent
variable prior to the introduction of the
treatment.
11Parts of the Experiment
- Posttest gt the measurement of the independent
variable after the treatment has been introduced
into the experiment situation - Experimental group gt the group that receives the
treatment or in which treatment is present - Control group gt the group that does not receive
the treatment
12Random Assignment
- Participants divided into groups at the beginning
of experimental research using a random process
so the experimenter can treat the groups as
equivalent - Randomness in statistical or mathematical sense
All participants have an equal chance of ending
up in one or the other group - Increases our confidence that the groups do not
differ in any systematic way
13Random Assignment
14How to Randomly Assign?
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16Controls in Experiment
- By controlling confounding effects and isolating
the effects of the treatment, we eliminate
alternative explanations - Deception Sometimes we intentionally mislead
participants to control the experiment setting - Deception involves using confederates and cover
stories (as false explanations) - Using placebo simulated or ineffectual treatment
intended to deceive the participants - Blind studies Single blind double-blind
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18Steps in Experiment (1)
- Hypothesis
- Choose a design
- Design experiment
- How to introduce IV
- How to measure DV
- Locate subjects
- Randomly assign subjects
19Steps in Experiment (2)
- Gather pretest data
- Run experiment
- Introduce treatment
- Measure DV
- Gather posttest data
- Debrief
- Analyze data
20Types of Experimental Design
- Classical Experimental Design
- Includes random assignment, a control group and
experimental group, and a pretest and posttest
for each group - Pre-Experimental Design
- Lack control group and random assignment
- Weaker than classical experiment
- Substitude classical experiments when they are
not possible
21Types of Experimental Design
- Quasi-Experimental Design
- We call them quasi (apparently, as if) becuse
they are variations of the classical design - Some have control group and randomization but
lack a pretest
22Types of Experimental Design
23Classical Experimental Design
- Figure 8.6 Pretest-posttest control-group
design.
24Classical Experiment Example
- You have 40 newly hired waiters you instruct
them not to introduce themselves with first name
and not to return during the meal to check on the
customers - You randomly divide the waiters into two groups
of 20 persons (random assignment) and send each
group to one of two restaurants to begin working.
- You record the amount of tips for all
participants for one month (pretest score)
25Classical Experiment Example
- Next, you retrain the group at restaurant A
(experiment group) and instruct them to introduce
themselves with first name and ask Is everything
fine? 10 minutes after delivering the food
(treatment). - You remind the group at restaurant B (control
group) to continue as before. - Over the second month, you record the amount of
tips for both groups (posttest score)
26Internal Validity
- Occurs when the independent variable, and nothing
else, influences the dependent variable. - Anything other than independent variable
threatens internal validity - Artifacts gt unwanted or confounding variables
that are due to the particular experimental
arrangement
27Threats to Internal Validity
- Selection bias
- A bias that arise when groups in an experiment
are not equivalent with regard to the DV - History
- Something occurs and affects the DV during an
experiment is unplanned and outside the
researchers control - Maturation
- Natural processes of growth, boredom, fatigue
that occur during the experiment and affect DV
28Threats to Internal Validity
- Testing The very process of measuring, the
pretest measure itself has an effect on DV - Instrumentation Occurs when the instrument or
measure of the DV changes during the experiment - Experimental mortality
- Participant fail to participate throughout the
entire experiment they leave the experiment - Demand characteristics
- Participants guess the study hypothesis and
respond to what they think the experimenter
demands from them
29Threats to Internal Validity
- Diffusion of treatment
- The treatment spills over from the experimental
group and control group participants modify their
behavior because they learn of the treatment - Compensatory behavior
- When participants in the control group modify
their behavior to make up for not getting the
treatment - Experimenter expectancy
- Experimenter indirectly makes participants aware
of the hypothesis or desired results
30External Validity
- The ability to generalize experiment findings
- It addresses two major questions
- 1. Can we generalize from the specific collection
of participants in one experiment to an entire
population gt Population generalization - 2. Can we generalize from what occurs in a highly
controlled and artificial setting to most
natural, real world situations gt Naturalistic
generalization
31External Validity
32Field Experiments
- An experiment that takes place in the field a
natural setting instead of an artifical one
(laboratory) - They have lower internal validity but higher
external validity than laboratory experiments - Participants are usually unaware that they are
involved in an experiment and react in a natural
way - Example A confederate fakes a heart attack on
the subway to see how the bystanders react
33Field Experiments
- Helping behavior and gender
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vBuyIOM4d-OAfeature
related
34Practical Considerations
- Planning and pilot testing
- We anticipate alternative explanations or threats
to internal validity during a good planning phase - Instructions to subjects
- Preparing instructions carefully so that all
participants understand the exact same thing - Post-experiment interview
- Ethically debriefing research participants the
deception understanding what participants
thought and felt during the experiment
35Online Resources
- This University of Denver site provides links to
various online experiments in which students can
participate. - http//www.du.edu/psychology/methods/
36Watch it ?
- Super Size Me
- Field experiment by Morgan Spurlock (2004)
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?v4Q-ezCOCVmgfeature
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